He told them, “l have an electric train track. l am good on my train track. l can control two trains at once.”

So the museum invited him to the museum and gave him the title of ‘Director of Fun’.

Last birthday, my nephews Bill and Bob were given a model railway as a present.

They had track and a train and a station and also some houses, people and farm animals. Their dad found them a big board to start building a model on.

They thought they were really lucky to have such a wonderful present.

Ever since, they have been buying extra bits and pieces to add to their model by using their pocket money (that is when they are not saving up to be millionaires).

They have also found clever ways to make things themselves and their mum and dad have been helping them.

They would like to share their ideas with all you Salty Sam Blog readers who have model train sets too, and here they are:-

You can mix builders’ sand with PVA glue and paint to make surfaces on your model. Green makes grass and grey makes roads, pathways, tennis courts or stones to go under your tracks. lf you just use glue without any paint, the sand can make sandy beaches.

Tiny stones mixed with glue can make pebble beaches or painted black can make piles of coal, or you could use the little bits of plastic collected from trimming plastic canvas panels.

You can use plastic trays that have contained food as plastic sheets for modelling. lf they have textured surfaces they can be painted with a mixture of paint and PVA glue to make the surfaces of platforms, car parks, pathways and pavements.

You can take little boxes that have had films or soaps or stock cubes in them and cover them with papier-mâché or corrugated cardboard (sometimes to be found inside biscuit wrapping) and they can be turned into rough farm buildings or sheds.

Matchsticks can make window frames and wood panelling.

To make papier-mâché you pour a little water into a small tray, mix in a little PVA glue and dip small pieces of kitchen paper into the water. Then lay these layers onto your box and build up in layers.

The paper looks like rough plaster and the corrugated card looks like logs or corrugated iron. Once the PVA glue has set rock hard the buildings can be painted. The drying process may take several days.

lf this is too fiddly for your little fingers to do, maybe you can find a kindly and patient uncle to help you.

(Remember to make sure that if you have baby brothers or sisters they can’t get hold of your railway set because they might break or swallow the little pieces.) As any man who has a railway layout will tell you, it is a model and not a toy.

Bye bye everyone – don’t forget to subscribe to my blog!

Love and kisses

Salty Sam

www.christina-sinclair.com

Bill and Bob’s Joke of the Week

Bob: Have you heard about my cousin?

Bill: No?

Bob: He is so bow-legged – when he stands around the house, he really stands around the house!

This stunning model can be seen at the Bethnal Green Museum of Childhood

Slopes left bare can look like bare rock

Stations and houses bought ready-made

Toy cars are the right scale

A signal box and signal

Station yards can store coal and water

Fencing can be bought or made

Models don’t have to depict modern scenes

Models can depict scenes from history

(London Transport Museum)

THE SALTY SAM NEWS DESK

So now Bill and Bob are on the look out for any textured surface or interesting plastic shape from discarded packaging.

They thought these ink cartridge clips looked like bicycle racks to put outside a station.

Trimming from plastic canvas can be mixed with black paint and PVA glue to make piles of coal.

They found some clear plastic from the front of a pack of batteries that looked like greenhouses and another pack that looked like a bus shelter.

Watch out for next week’s blog post because there are more ideas coming up!

Writing my blog is a lot of fun

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Quick Quiz

Railway trains could pull larger loads than horses could, and machines took over the work of horses during the lndustrial Revolution. But before this, people and horses lived and worked side by side for hundreds of years on farm land and in forests and horses were the only form of long-distance transport on land.

Do you know what do these phrases mean?

straight from the horse’s mouth

to lock the stable door after the horse has bolted

to look a gift horse in the mouth

to change horses in mid-stream

hold you horses

horse play

horse sense

BLOW MY FOGHORN!!!

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lt’s the Weekend!

HOW TO MAKE ROUGH BUlLDlNGS

FOR YOUR MODEL RAlLWAY

These buildings aren’t as good as shop-bought buildings, but if you try to create sheds and rough farm barns and other out-buildings then mix them into the landscape they can look quite authentic.

Take a small box, cut out any windows or doorways before you start to cover it with a textured surface. This is best done with a small modelling knife, so if you are not allowed to use one, then ask a grown up if they can help you.

Look out for film boxes or stock cube boxes; they are a good size to use.

Use sticky tape to stick together a roof – you will need triangles of card at each end. Paint won’t stick to sticky tape so you will have to put a surface on top to paint.

Cover with papier machė or glue on corrugated cardboard or match sticks. Match sticks can also be used as window frames.

Stiff, corrugated paper can sometimes be found in boxes of chocolates or biscuits. This is good to use if you want to make a log cabin. Matchsticks look like planks of wood.

Remember that these models can only be used indoors. Sticky tape and PVA glue will not withstand getting wet. Because PVA glue is water-based it will melt in the rain.

These are more models than toys, so don’t let your baby brothers and sisters get hold of them.

Please note that the material on this blog is for personal use and for use in classrooms only.

It is a copyright infringement and, therefore, illegal under international law to sell items made with these patterns.

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